The value profit chain :threat employees like customers and customers like employeesHeskett, James L.Primary AuthorSchlesinger, Leonard A.Primary AuthorSasser Jr., W. EarlPrimary Authormixed materialbibliographyNew YorkThe Free Press20032English
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xxii, 377p.: ill.; 24cm.Serving employees well and knowing when to "fire" a customer will boost a firm's bottom line, according to this team of Harvard Business School professors. The authors of The Service Profit Chain here stress the creation of lifetime customers and detail the complex relationship between employee satisfaction, customer retention and profitability. They use examples from firms including Federal Express, Southwest Airlines and Wal-Mart. The highly successful Southwest Airlines, for example, couldn't deliver its much-envied 25-minute aircraft turnaround, from arrival to departure from the gate, without a dedicated, team-oriented staff that's vested in the company. That's why all Southwest employees with more than six months of service hold ownership stakes in the firm. Perhaps more important is how Southwest manages customers that must be "targeted, selected, and `trained' in the unusual ways of the airline-no assigned seats, no meals, no connections with other airlines." By turning high-maintenance customers away, the firm stays profitable. These anecdotes aside, the book is laden with b-school sentences, e.g., "The value concept is achieved with maximum benefit for customers, employees, partners, and investors through an operating strategy that seeks to leverage results over costs by means of such factors as organization, policies, processes, practices, measures, controls, and incentives." With text like this and numerous charts and diagrams, the book will appeal mainly to academics and business professionals. However, there are a few nuggets that will appeal to a broader audience, like the fact that the greeters near the entrance to Wal-Mart stores were originally put there to reduce shoplifting.
ORGANIZATIONAL EFFECTIVENESSCUSTOMER SERVICESCONSUMER SATISFACTIONCOMMUNICATION IN MARKETINGEMPLOYEE LOYALTYHF5415.50743225694IPMI Library HF5415.5 .H473 200300000009092 (General Book)HF5415.5 .H473 2003the%2Bvalue%2Bprofit%2Bchain--heskett.jpg58880000-00-00 00:00:000000-00-00 00:00:00machine generated